News

While the U.S. government’s recent attacks on higher education may look much different from the Taliban’s, there are some parallels and useful lessons.
In an exclusive chat with India Today Digital, Firooza Amiri narrated how the Afghanistan women's cricketers took exile in ...
The repatriation of Afghan refugees is not only devastating and dangerous. It amounts to a betrayal—one that certain Western ...
They can't express themselves due to the restrictions but I want to reflect the Afghan women's silent voice with my painting.
The move to ban chess is just the latest in an long list of restrictions to cultural, social and sporting events in ...
graduate-level education courses this fall for young alumni of Asian University for Women, who had been living and working in Afghanistan prior the fall of Kabul in August 2021, but now reside in ...
Afghanistan is not a safe place for Afghan women and girls to enjoy a good life, including pursuing an education. Since the global military powers are focused on other issues, it is improbable ...
“Imagine 64 women from Afghanistan who, one way or another, they will get an incredible education. What will that mean for them, for their families, for the attitudes of everybody around them?
As Sue Gray joins the board of the Friends of Afghan Women Network, co-founder Shabnam Nasimi argues that the exclusion of Afghan women is not inevitable. It is the result of choices by those in power ...
Rising University of Louisville senior Divya Naidugari is the founder of University Students for Afghanistan Education and Development (USAED), and started the first ever education course for ...
the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan led to the repression of women’s rights in the country, restricting basic freedoms and banning teenage girls from education. The United Nations ...